Converting Matlab code to C code

I'm trying to convert the following matlab code to c code, I did it both in windows and in linux systems by using Visual Studio in windows and gcc in linux as the compiler. However I couldn't get correct results by running the generated c code. Can anyone have a idea how to modify this matlab code in order to generate the matched c code? I would appreciate that!
function matc(n)
val = 0;
for i = 1:n
x = 2*rand(3,1);
val = val + f(x);
end
val = 2^3*val/n

6 commentaires

Friedrich
Friedrich le 29 Fév 2012
What is f ?
AW
AW le 29 Fév 2012
function y = f(x)
y = sin(x(1) + x(2)^2 +x(3)^3);
James Tursa
James Tursa le 29 Fév 2012
Please format your code so it is readable. Is the function supposed to return val? Are you looking for a mex function, or just a C-language code snippet?
AW
AW le 29 Fév 2012
Right, return val. I was trying to generate a c executable by initializing n with a value(for example, adding n=1000 to the code). Thanks.
function matc(n)
val = 0;
for i = 1:n
x = 2*rand(3,1);
val = val + f(x);
end
val = 2^3*val/n
function y = f(x)
y = sin(x(1) + x(2)^2 +x(3)^3);
Kaustubha Govind
Kaustubha Govind le 29 Fév 2012
How exactly do the results vary?
AW
AW le 29 Fév 2012
Sometimes I got val=4.94066e-324, sometimes I got val=0. I use the following code in file main.c:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <math.h>
#include "matc.h"
int main()
{
printf("matc=%g\n", matc());
return 0;
}
I'm not sure if it's because of the main.c file, I have modified it to several different versions, but still couldn't get the matched c code.
Any idea? Thanks for your help!

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Réponses (6)

Kaustubha Govind
Kaustubha Govind le 1 Mar 2012

2 votes

To expand's on Walter's answer, your MATLAB code should look like this:
function val = matc(n)
val = 0;
for i = 1:n
x = 2*rand(3,1);
val = val + f(x);
end
val = 2^3*val/n
function y = f(x)
y = sin(x(1) + x(2)^2 +x(3)^3);
(Note how 'val' is being returned from the function by adding it to the "function" line).
And your C code should look like this:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <math.h>
#include "matc.h"
int main()
{
printf("matc=%g\n", matc(0.2));
return 0;
}
Note how an input value needs to be passed into matc.
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson le 29 Fév 2012

0 votes

You are not passing any value from the C code to the matc() routine. The initial value of an undefined parameter is undefined, so any result could occur.
AW
AW le 29 Fév 2012

0 votes

Thanks for your replying. I defined n as double(1x1) while I was creating a project using matlab coder. Is that fine?

1 commentaire

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson le 29 Fév 2012
Yes, having it declared as type double is fine, but you still need to pass a specific variable in to matc() when you make the call to matc()
printf("matc=%g\n", matc(42.));

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AW
AW le 1 Mar 2012

0 votes

Thanks a lot! I tested it with your suggestions, still get a result of 0. I use the following command for generating c code, codegen -config cfg matc -args {1000}

10 commentaires

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson le 1 Mar 2012
What does your code look like at present?
AW
AW le 1 Mar 2012
function val = matc(n) %#codegen
val = 0;
for i = 1:n
x = 2*rand(3,1);
val = val + f(x);
end
val = 2^3*val/n
function y = f(x)
y = sin(x(1) + x(2)^2 +x(3)^3);
in file main.c,
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <math.h>
#include "matc.h"
int main()
{
printf("matc=%g\n", matc(1000));
return 0;
}
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson le 1 Mar 2012
Looks plausible. I would put a line in matc() displaying the value of n at the beginning, to cross-check that you are getting the input you expect.
AW
AW le 2 Mar 2012
Thank you for the suggestion. I did it with adding n=1000, but still got a 0.
Kaustubha Govind
Kaustubha Govind le 2 Mar 2012
Try putting a statement "disp(val)" at the bottom of your "matc" function and recompile the code. Does the MATLAB code display a zero too?
AW
AW le 2 Mar 2012
I got an error message shows that "Function 'disp' is not supported for code generation. Consider using coder.extrinsic('disp') to bypass code generation.". So I added "coder.extrinsic('disp')" associated with "disp(val)". But still get a zero.
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson le 2 Mar 2012
So somehow the argument isn't getting passed in correctly, I don't know why at the moment.
Say, what does matc.h contain?
AW
AW le 2 Mar 2012
/*
* matc.h
*/
#ifndef __MATC_H__
#define __MATC_H__
/* Include files */
#include <math.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include "rt_nonfinite.h"
#include "rtwtypes.h"
#include "matc_types.h"
/* Type Definitions */
/* Named Constants */
/* Variable Declarations */
/* Variable Definitions */
/* Function Declarations */
extern real_T matc(real_T n);
extern void matc_initialize(void);
extern void matc_terminate(void);
#endif
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson le 2 Mar 2012
Hmmm, I wonder if real_T is single or double precision?
And I wonder if the code generator is treating 1000 as integer?
Could I ask you to indulge my curiosity and try 1000. (with the perod to force syntactic floating point) ? And to also try with
single(1000) and double(1000) ?
AW
AW le 2 Mar 2012
I did the tests with 1000., single(1000) and double(1000). All come with zero results.

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AW
AW le 7 Mar 2012

0 votes

Anyone has an idea? Thanks.

1 commentaire

Kaustubha Govind
Kaustubha Govind le 8 Mar 2012
AW: I would recommend using a "disp" command in your script. Since disp is not supported for code-generation, you need to add this line at the top of your function:
coder.extrinsic('disp');
%eml.extrinsic('disp') for older versions of MATLAB
Then, generate a MEX-file from your code (instead of standalone C code). You can use the command:
>> codegen -config:mex matc.m
Then run the generated MEX-file in MATLAB. What does the disp command show?

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AW
AW le 21 Mar 2012

0 votes

Thanks all for your suggestions!
Finally the code was generated to C successfully. Updated matc.m and main.c are listed as following.
% matc.m
function val = matc(n) %#codegen
val = 0;
for i = 1:n
x = 2*rand(3,1);
val = val + f(x);
end
val = 2^3*val/n;
end
function y = f(x)
y = sin(x(1) + x(2)^2 +x(3)^3);
end
------------------------------------------
/*
** main.c
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <math.h>
#include "matc.h"
#include "matc_initialize.h"
#include "matc_terminate.h"
int main()
{
matc_initialize();
printf("matc=%lf\n", matc(1000));
matc_terminate();
return 0;
}

2 commentaires

Kaustubha Govind
Kaustubha Govind le 22 Mar 2012
Thanks for posting back your answer, AW. So what exactly was the error you were making before?
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson le 22 Mar 2012
The difference seems to be the %#codegen

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AW
le 29 Fév 2012

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